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  2. Cigar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cigar

    Long filler cigars are a far higher quality of cigar, using long leaves throughout. These cigars also use a third variety of tobacco leaf, called a "binder", between the filler and the outer wrapper. This permits the makers to use more delicate and attractive leaves as a wrapper. These high-quality cigars almost always blend varieties of tobacco.

  3. Connecticut shade tobacco - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Connecticut_shade_tobacco

    Area farmers grew tobacco for the two outside layers of cigars, the binder and the wrapper. By the 1830s, tobacco farmers were experimenting with different seeds and processing techniques. [3] Knowing that they were not the only players in the cigar wrapper economy, farmers began planting a new tobacco species in 1875, the Havana Seed.

  4. Toscano (cigar) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Toscano_(cigar)

    Unlike Caribbean cigars, where a binder is rolled around the filler tobacco before the wrapper tobacco covers it over, the Toscano cigar is made by rolling the filler tobacco with only the wrapper tobacco (without any binder). The production of cigars then continues on two lines: production by hand for high quality and limited edition cigars ...

  5. Ecuadorian Sumatra Tobacco - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ecuadorian_Sumatra_Tobacco

    Ecuadorian Sumatra Tobacco (sometimes spelled Ecuadoran or Ecuadorean) is a tobacco grown in Quevedo, a fertile sub-tropical region in Los Ríos Province, Ecuador, and is used primarily as a wrapper for premium cigars.

  6. Criollo tobacco - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Criollo_tobacco

    Criollo is a type of tobacco, primarily used in the making of cigars. It was, by most accounts, one of the original Cuban tobaccos that emerged around the time of Columbus . The term means native seed , and thus a tobacco variety using the term, such as Dominican Criollo , may or may not have anything to do with the original Cuban seed nor the ...

  7. Cuban cigar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cuban_cigar

    The filler, binder, and wrapper may come from different areas of the island, though much is produced in Pinar del Río province, in the regions of Vuelta Abajo and Semi Vuelta, as well as in farms in the Viñales region. [2] All cigar production in Cuba is controlled by state-owned Cubatabaco. The Cuban cigar is also referred to as El Habano. [3]

  8. Corojo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Corojo

    Successful leaf growth of Kenbano in Kentucky soil. Corojo is a type of tobacco, primarily used in the making of wrappers for cigars.The variety was originally grown in the Vuelta Abajo region of Cuba but is today grown exclusively in the Jamastran valley of Honduras and in the United States in Western Kentucky.

  9. Cigar boom - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cigar_boom

    Cigar industry veteran Lew Rothman later recalled that "Because there was only a finite number of potential customers and a fairly predictable demand for premium cigars, the quantity of tobacco planted to supply that demand, and the price for those wrappers, binders, and filler leaves, remained very constant throughout the 1980s and into the ...